Rapid Action Urged as Key UN Climate Change Conference Opens
UN Climate Change News, Katowice, 2 December 2018 – Following a year of devastating climate disasters around the globe, from California to Kerala, and Tonga to Japan, the annual UN Climate Change Conference (COP24) opens today with the goal of finalising the implementation guidelines for the Paris Climate Change Agreement. The guidelines will provide clarity on how to implement the landmark agreement fairly and transparently for all.
Specifically, they will strengthen
international cooperation by ensuring that national
contributions to the global effort are transparent,
responsibility is shared fairly and progress on reducing
emissions and building resilience can be accurately
measured.
Patricia Espinosa, the UN’s Climate
Chief, said: “This year is likely to be one of the four
hottest years on record. Greenhouses gas concentrations in
the atmosphere are at record levels and emissions continue
to rise. Climate change impacts have never been worse. This
reality is telling us that we need to do much more – COP24
needs to make that happen”.
A finalized set of
implementation guidelines will unleash practical climate
actions with respect to all the targets and goals of the
Paris Agreement, including adapting to climate change
impacts, reducing greenhouse gas emissions and providing
financial and other support to developing countries.
Six months after the 2015 Paris Summit, the negotiations on the implementation guidelines were launched and COP24 was set as the deadline. While governments are committed to finalizing the guidelines in order to unleash the full potential of the agreement, a great deal of work still remains to be completed in Katowice.
“The 2015 Paris Agreement
entered into force faster than any other agreement of its
kind. I now call on all countries to come together, to build
upon this success and to make the agreement fully
functional”, said in-coming COP President, Mr. Michal
Kurtyka.
“We are ready to work with all nations to
ensure that we leave Katowice with a full set of
implementation guidelines and with the knowledge that we
have served the world and its people”, he added.
Ms. Espinosa noted that countries have strong backing for rapid climate action, given that public awareness and demand for solutions have increased due to clear evidence that our climate is changing.
“We simply cannot tell
millions of people around the globe who are already
suffering from the effects of climate change that we did not
deliver”, she said.
Talanoa
Dialogue
The conference is being held hot on the heels of the Global Warming of 1.5C report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, as well as a cascade of UN and other reports on increasing greenhouse gas concentrations and emissions and on health and other serious impacts.
“All of these findings confirm the need to
maintain the strongest commitment to the Paris Agreement’s
aims of limiting global warming to well below 2ºC and
pursuing efforts towards 1.5ºC”, Ms. Espinosa
stressed.
“All our focus should be on reaching this
aim and on building up ambition towards it”, she
added.
COP24 will also conclude the year-long,
Fiji-led Talanoa Dialogue, the first-ever international
conversation of its kind to assess progress towards the
goals of the Paris Agreement, including the goal of limiting
global temperature increases.
One of the dialogue’s
aims is to find practical and local solutions for how
countries can increase their ambition in the next round of
Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs), which describe
their individual efforts to reduce national
emissions.
During the high-level event that will
conclude the Talanoa Dialogue, Ministers will consider the
IPCC’s 1.5ºC report and its relevance in the context of
future actions.
“It is my hope that this will give
Ministers the opportunity to provide a political signal for
enhanced ambition”, Ms. Espinosa said.
COP
highlights
Following a procedural opening on Sunday, 2 December, to enable work to begin quickly, Monday will be the grand opening ceremony graced by the presence of some 40 Heads of State and Heads of Government.
In a
world-first, and supported by the in-coming Polish COP
presidency, the UN has launched the “People’s Seat”
initiative. During Monday’s opening ceremony, the
initiative will open a new window for people to express
their views through social media and digital
technology.
It will also aim to engage people from
all walks of life around the globe in the growing momentum
to take climate action in their personal lives.
Climate action before 2020
At the COP, Ministers will have the opportunity to engage in several high-level events, which all highlight the key elements of current climate change efforts.
These high-level
events will address some critical aspects of climate action
before the year 2020, including:
The Pre-2020 Stocktake will assess climate actions to be taken before 2020.
The High-level Ministerial Dialogue on Climate
Finance will consider the state of global
climate finance flows as captured by the third Biennial
Assessment.
The High-level Global Climate
Action Event will offer a unique vision of
how the world is affected by climate change and how
different sectors are tackling the issue.
Together,
all events provide Ministers with a space to have frank and
open discussions on progress made to date.
Capacity-building for climate action, a critically important
element for developing countries now and in the future, will
receive a significant boost at COP24.
At a specially
created capacity-building hub, some 35 events will cover
topics such as implementing NDCs, integrating gender into
climate action and utilizing the knowledge of indigenous
peoples.
The Marrakech Partnership for Global
Climate Action
The growing momentum for climate action by non-Party stakeholders such as cities, regions, businesses and investors will be showcased throughout the COP.
This momentum already represents USD 36 trillion
in economic activity and is growing steadily.
Showcasing these events at the COP is leading to a new form
of inclusive multilateralism that is vital to achieving the
goals of the Paris Agreement.
Well over 100 events
will highlight action in transport, water, land-use, energy,
the fashion industry, to name a few, representing the
spectrum of climate action. They will include CEOs, Mayors,
Governors and other leaders from civil society at
large.
About the
UNFCCC
With 197 Parties, the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) has near universal membership and is the parent treaty of the 2015 Paris Climate Change Agreement. The main aim of the Paris Agreement is to keep a global average temperature rise this century well below 2 degrees Celsius and to drive efforts to limit the temperature increase even further to 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels. The UNFCCC is also the parent treaty of the 1997 Kyoto Protocol. The ultimate objective of all agreements under the UNFCCC is to stabilize greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere at a level that will prevent dangerous human interference with the climate system, in a time frame which allows ecosystems to adapt naturally and enables sustainable development.
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